He had been in charge of business groups including the chief technology office, chief scientist, software group and corporate strategy.

In a statement, Telstra said Elop had been “instrumental in … building the company’s technology credentials”, including bringing the CTO and corporate strategy functions together.

He will finish up “in his full time executive capacity at Telstra on July 31”, the telco said, though he will “continue to maintain a close relationship with the business”.

Under the new Telstra2022 structure, networks and IT become a joint function, and Telstra said today that it would be led by Nikos Katinakis, who is set to arrive in mid-October.

Katinakis currently has a similar remit at the Indian data-only mobile telco Reliance Jio.

That link is likely to be particularly important for Telstra.

Telecommunications entrepreneur Bevan Slattery said earlier this year that he expected LTE newcomer TPG to attack the Australian market with “Jio-style services”.

That appeared to ring true months later when TPG said it would offer data-only plans with six months of free access when it opens its mobile network later this year.

Though TPG won’t offer the same network reach, Telstra will face some challenges to its mobile customer base from TPG’s market entry, and so adopting a similar mindset in how the mobile network is managed is unlikely to go astray.

Three more execs out

Also out in today's restructure is chief financial officer Warwick Bray, group general counsel Will Irving, and chief marketing officer Joe Pollard.

Telstra's chief operating officer Robyn Denholm shifts into a new combined role as CFO and head of strategy.

Legal and corporate affairs will continue to sit under Carmel Mulhern, and Vicki Brady also keeps her role leading consumer and small business.

Telstra Enterprise lead Brendon Riley will shift to the role of CEO of Telstra InfraCo, which is to be the new standalone infrastructure business unit running everything barring Telstra's mobile network and associated backhaul.

SBS managing director and CEO Michael Ebeid will be brought into Telstra to run the enterprise business unit instead.

The only remaining executive spot that is still open is to lead Product & Technology. Telstra indicated it had already made "an external appointment" but did not yet disclose who would fill the role.

The executive overhaul forms part of the Telstra2022 strategy that CEO Andy Penn unveiled last month in a bid to rescue the company and arrest its sliding fortunes.

A centrepiece of the strategy is the loss of around 9500 roles (and the creation of 1500 new positions, resulting in a net loss of 8000).

These job losses started about a fortnight ago, though little has been said about exactly which areas are impacted.

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